Winnipeg Free Press

Thursday, November 06, 2025

Issue date: Thursday, November 6, 2025
Pages available: 32
Previous edition: Wednesday, November 5, 2025

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  • Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • Pages available: 32
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Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 6, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba , , 5x1lb. Lean Ground Beef 1x3-4lbs. Beef Roast 5lbs. Chicken Legs 10lbs. Pork Butt Steak 6x1lb. Bacon 6x1lb. Breakfast Sausage 3lbs. BBQ Cut Pork Side Ribs 1 Ring Garlic Sausage 2kg. Smokies REG PRICE $269.99 SALE 259 99 /ea FROZEN #5 GOURMET PACK FROZEN #12 MEAT PACK Monday – Wednesday 8AM – 5PM; Thursday – Saturday 8AM – 6PM; Closed Sundays LOGAN LOCATION ONLY. FRESH MEAT PACKS FOR AN ADDITIONAL $10 I N B U S I N E S S S I N C E 1 9 4 3 FOR CURBSIDE PICK-UP AND CONTACTLESS DELIVERY, GO TO WWW.CANTORSMEATS.COM 1445 LOGAN AVENUE 204-774-1679 OR 1-800-874-7770 Logan Location Only! DELI SPECIALS!! Logan & Express Locations 2lbs. Ribeye Steak 3lbs. Pork Tenderloin 3lbs. Boneless Chicken Breast 3lbs. Bacon 5x1lb. Lean Ground Beef REG PRICE $169.99 SALE 159 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS GRAPE TOMATOES 283G OR MINI CUCUMBERS 6 COUNT LEAN GROUND BEEF *Logan & Cantor’s Express TOP SIRLOIN STEAK or ROAST *Logan & Cantor’s Express CROSS RIB STEAK or ROAST *Logan & Cantor’s Express RIND ON PORK BELLY *Logan & Cantor’s Express FRESH WHOLE CHICKEN WINGS *Logan & Cantor’s Express MAPLE LEAF SMOKIES or SAUSAGE RINGS *Logan & Cantor’s Express BEEF SHANK *Logan & Cantor’s Express PORK SHOULDER BLADE STEAK or ROAST *Logan & Cantor’s Express 7 29 /lb $16.07/kg MAPLE LEAF PEPPERONI BITES *Logan & Cantor’s Express DORITOS TORTILLA CHIPS 235G OR CHEETOS CHEESE SNACKS 215-295G 2/ 9 00 PUREX BATHROOM TISSUE 12 DOUBLE ROLLS 8 99 /ea HEINZ BROWNED BEANS OR PASTAS 398ML EXCLUDES KIDNEY BEANS 3/ 5 50 TOSTITOS TORTILLA CHIPS 260-295G 2/ 8 50 KOOLAID JAMMERS 10 X 180ML 4 49 /ea COMPLIMENTS SOFT DRINKS 2L 3/ 5 00 COMPLIMENTS POTATO CHIPS 200G 3/ 5 50 MCCAIN SUPER FRIES & POTATO PRODUCTS 454-800G 3 49 /ea DANONE ACTIVIA YOGURT 650G 4 49 /ea CAVENDISH FRENCH FRIES, ONION RING OR WEDGES 400-750G 3 49 /ea CAMPBELL’S BROTHS 900ML 2/ 5 00 CRACKER BARREL SHREDDED CHEESE 250-320G 6 49 /ea POPSICLE BRAND FUDGESICLES OR REVELLOS 12 COUNT 5 99 /ea KELLOGG’S EGGO WAFFLES OR PANCAKES 270-280G 2/ 7 00 PILLSBURY PIZZA POPS 380G 3 49 /ea COMPLIMENTS ICE CREAM 1.5L 4 99 /ea CLUB HOUSE SEASONING MIXES OR GRAVIES 20-47G 99 ¢ /ea BULLSEYE BBQ SAUCE 425ML 3 69 /ea BUSH’S BEST BAKED BEANS OR CHILI BEANS 398ML 2 29 /ea COMPLIMENTS DRY PASTAS 900G 2/ 5 00 CLASSICO PESTO, ALFREDO OR PASTA SAUCES 218-600ML 3 99 /ea RICE A RONI 177-277G 1 99 /ea CHRISTIES SNACKING CRACKERS 180-200G 2/ 6 00 ALLEN’S APPLE JUICE 1.89L 3 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS GARLIC BREAD 284G 2 49 /ea YOPLAIT YOGURT TUBES 448G 2 99 /ea KELLOGG’S FAMILY SIZE CEREALS 480-600G 6 99 /ea GENERAL MILLS CHEERIOS OR PRE SWEET CEREALS 300-437G 4 99 /ea JIF PEANUT BUTTER 1KG 6 49 /ea GAY LEA SOUR CREAM 500ML 2 99 /ea CHEEMO FROZEN PEROGIES 907G 2 79 /ea COMPLIMENTS WIENERS ORIGINAL OR JUMBO, 450G 2/ 5 00 COMPLIMENTS FRENCH FRIES 800G 3 99 /ea TAST!EZ FROZEN ENTREES 311-400G 3 99 /ea OLD DUTCH BAGGED POTATO CHIPS, RIDGES OR VEGGIE CRISPS 200-235G 2/ 7 00 CHAPMAN’S ICE CREAM PAILS 4L 8 99 /ea CHRISTIES PREMIUM PLUS SODA CRACKERS 450G 4 99 /ea DOVE DEEP MOISTURE BODY WASH 1.04L 9 99 /ea OLD SPICE KRAKENGARD BODY WASH 987ML 7 99 /ea NESTLE PARLOUR FROZEN DESSERT 1.5L OR NOVELTIES 12 COUNT 5 99 /ea BECEL ORIGINAL SOFT MARGARINE 1.22KG 7 99 /ea ZIPLOC MEDIUM OR LARGE FREEZER BAGS 50-60 COUNT 6 49 /ea KELLOGG’S NUTRIGRAIN BARS, POPTARTS OR SPECIAL K CRISPS 178-384G 2/ 6 50 CHRISTIES FAMILY SIZE COOKIES, OREO CAKESTERS, RITZ OR TRISCUITS CRACKERS 285-520G 5 49 /ea ORIGINAL KRAFT DINNER 12X200G 12 99 /ea ROBIN HOOD FLOUR 2.5KG 5 99 /ea PURITAIN CANNED STEWS 410G 3 69 /ea GOOD HOST ICED TEA CRYSTALS 2.35KG 12 99 /ea FRANK’S RED HOT SAUCE 740ML 5 29 /ea GAIN COLD WATER 4.87L 19 49 /ea IOGO CREAMY YOGURT CUPS 24X100G 8 49 /ea BREADED SPICY CHICKEN SLIDERS 2LBS 9 99 /ea *SUPER BLOW OUT DEAL* KRAFT ORIGINAL CHEEZ WHIZ 900G WHILE SUPPLIES LAST 2 99 /ea RED BARON CLASSIC CRUST FROZEN PIZZAS 317-665g 4 99 /ea 5 99 /ea 2 99 /ea PRICES IN EFFECT THURS., NOV. 6 - WED., NOV. 12 SMITH’S CORNED BEEF, ROAST BEEF, SMOKED BEEF OR PASTRAMI WINNIPEG OLD COUNTRY BUNG BOLOGNA BURN'S PEPPERONI OR SALAMI COOKED HAM COOKED OR SMOKED TURKEY BREAST MAPLE LEAF PEPPERONI STICKS 750g CANTOR’S OWN PICKLED BRISKET CANTOR’S OWN SALT PORK CANTOR’S OWN GARLIC COIL FRESH PORK PICNIC ROAST LEAN GROUND PORK FRESH TAIL OFF PORK BACK RIBS FROZEN PORK BUTTONS EAST 40 BACON ENDS 13 99 lb $30.84/kg 6 99 lb $15.41/kg 2 99 lb $6.59/kg 2 69 lb $5.93/kg 2 69 lb $5.93/kg 4 99 lb $11.00/kg 3 99 lb $8.80/kg 6 99 lb $15.41/kg 3 49 /100g $34.90/kg 1 99 /100g 19.90/kg 2 10 /100g $21.00/kg 1 19 /100g $11.90/kg 2 89 /100g 28.90/kg 7 99 /ea FRESH RASPBERRIES 340g FRESH BLUEBERRIES 1 PINT 6 THU 7 FRI 8 SAT 10 MON 11 TUE 12 WED CELERY STALKS 1 99 /lb $4.39/kg BAGGED MACINTOSH OR GALA APPLES MANDARIN ORANGES WHOLE PINEAPPLE TOMATOES ON THE VINE 6 99 /ea 450 g 3 99 /lb $8.80kg 11 99 /lb $26.43/kg 9 99 /lb $22.02/kg 8 99 /lb $19.81kg 4 99 /lb $11.00kg 4 99 /lb $11.00/kg 4 99 /ea 8 99 /ea 1 kg 2 99 /ea 5 99 /ea 3lbs 7 99 /ea 4lb box 5 99 /ea THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2025 A8 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM NEWS I WORLD Typhoon Kalmaegi death toll rises to at least 114 M ANILA, Philippines — Philip- pine officials said today the death toll from widespread flooding and devastation caused by Ty- phoon Kalmaegi in the country’s cen- tral region has risen to at least 114 with 127 people reported missing, many of them in a hard-hit province still re- covering from a deadly earthquake. Most of the deaths were reported in the central province of Cebu, which was pummelled by Kalmaegi on Tuesday, setting off flash floods and causing a river and other waterways to overflow, said Bernardo Rafaelito Alejandro IV, deputy administrator of the Office of Civil Defence. Kalmaegi moved away from western Palawan province into the South China Sea before noon Wednesday and was barrelling toward Vietnam, according to forecasters. Among the dead were six people who were killed when a Philippine air force helicopter crashed in the southern province of Agusan del Sur on Tuesday. The crew was on its way to provide hu- manitarian help to provinces battered by Kalmaegi, the military said. It did not give the cause of the crash. Provincial officials said Kalmaegi set off flash floods and caused a river and other waterways to swell. The resulting flooding engulfed residential commun- ities, forcing residents to climb on their roofs, where they desperately pleaded to be rescued as the floodwaters rose, officials said. At least 71 people died in Cebu, most- ly due to drownings, 65 others were reported missing and 69 injured, the Office of Civil Defence said. It added that 62 others were reported missing in the central province of Ne- gros Occidental, which is located near Cebu. “We did everything we can for the typhoon but, you know, there are real- ly some unexpected things like flash floods,” Cebu Gov. Pamela Baricuatro told The Associated Press by telephone. Caloy Ramirez, a volunteer rescuer, said the massive flooding set off by the typhoon turned an upscale riverside residential community in Cebu city on Tuesday into an unrecognizable scene of tumbled SUVs and houses in dis- array. Residents said floodwater engulfed the first floors of their houses in just a few minutes, sending them scrambling to upper floors or roofs in panic. “We always expect the worst and what I saw yesterday was the worst,” Ramirez told The AP. He described how the faces of desperate residents would light up when they realized they were being rescued. The problems may have been made worse by years of quarrying that caused clogging of nearby rivers, which overflowed and substandard flood control projects in Cebu province, Baricuatro said. A corruption scandal involving sub- standard or non-existent flood control projects across the Philippines has sparked public outrage and street pro- tests in recent months. Cebu, a bustling province of more than 2.4 million people, declared a state of calamity to allow authorities to dis- burse emergency funds more rapidly. Cebu was still recovering from a 6.9 magnitude earthquake on Sept. 30 that left at least 79 people dead and displaced thousands when houses col- lapsed or were severely damaged. Thousands of northern Cebu residents who were displaced by the earthquake were moved to sturdier evacuation shelters from flimsy tents before the typhoon struck, Baricuatro said. Northern towns devastated by the earthquake were mostly not hit by floods generated by Kalmaegi, she add- ed. Before Kalmaegi’s landfall, officials said more than 387,000 people had evacuated to safer ground in eastern and central Philippine provinces. Ferries and fishing boats were pro- hibited from venturing out to increas- ingly rough seas, stranding more than 3,500 passengers and cargo truck drivers in nearly 100 seaports, the coast guard said. At least 186 domestic flights were cancelled. The Philippines is battered by about 20 typhoons and storms each year. The country also is often hit by earthquakes and has more than a dozen active volca- noes, making it one of the world’s most disaster-prone countries. Central Vietnam, still reeling from days of record rain that triggered flash floods and landslides, was bracing for more pounding rain as Kalmaegi nears. Fishing boats returned to shore while local authorities readied evacuation plans, secured shelters and stockpiled food, state media reported. — The Associated Press JIM GOMEZ JACQUELINE HERNANDEZ / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man cleans up outside a home after Typhoon Kalmaegi caused devastation in communities at Talisay City, Cebu province, central Philippines, Wednesday. Barrels toward Vietnam after leaving path of devastation in Philippines Mexico president presses charges after groping incident on street MEXICO CITY — What should have been a five-minute time-saving walk from Mexico’s National Palace to the Education Ministry for President Claudia Sheinbaum has become a symbol of what Mexican women face every day after a video captured a drunk man groping the country’s first woman president. On Wednesday, gender violence catapulted to the highest-profile plat- form, and Sheinbaum used her daily press briefing to say that she had pressed charges against the man. She also called on states to scrutin- ize their laws and procedures to make it easier for women to report such as- saults and said Mexicans needed to hear a “loud and clear no — women’s personal space must not be violated.” Sheinbaum said she felt a responsib- ility to press charges for all Mexican women. “If this is done to the presi- dent, what is going to happen to all of the young women in our country?” Indeed, if Mexico’s president is not exempt from street harassment, then it’s not difficult to imagine what women with hourslong commutes on public transportation are experien- cing daily. Andrea González Martínez, 27, who works for Mexican lender Nacional Monte de Piedad, said she has been ha- rassed on public transportation, in one case the man followed her home. “It happens regularly, it happens on public transportation,” she said. “It’s something you experience every day in Mexico.” Her coworker, Carmen Maldonado Castillo, 43, said she has witnessed it. “You can’t walk around free in the street,” she said. Sheinbaum said Wednesday that she had similar experiences of harass- ment when she was 12 years old using public transportation to get to school and understands the problem is wide- spread. “I decided to press charges because this is something that I experienced as a woman, but that we as women ex- perience in our country,” she said. The incident immediately raised questions about the president’s secur- ity, but Sheinbaum dismissed any sug- gestion that she would increase her security or change how she interacts with people. She explained that she and her team had decided to walk from the Nation- al Palace to the Education Ministry to avoid a 20-minute car ride in city traffic. Mexico City Mayor Clara Brugada had announced overnight that the man had been arrested. Brugada used some of Sheinbaum’s own language about being elected Mexico’s first woman president to em- phasize that harassment of any woman — in this case Mexico’s most powerful — is an assault on all women. When Sheinbaum was elected, she said that it wasn’t just her coming to power, it was all women. Brugada said that was “not a slogan, it’s a commitment to not look the other way, to not allow misogyny to continue to be veiled in habits, to not accept a single additional humiliation, not another abuse, not a single femicide more.” Lilian Valvuena, 31, said she didn’t think Sheinbaum had really taken vio- lence against women seriously until her firsthand experience yesterday. She hopes that work to better train po- lice to respond will follow. “They have to prepare them,” she said. “They don’t know what protocols to follow.” Marina Reyna, executive director of the Guerrero Association against Vio- lence toward Women, said that watch- ing the video she initially worried that Sheinbaum had minimized the assault, continuing to smile and talk calmly to the man. But she hoped the president’s willingness to talk about it Wednesday would change how such cases are han- dled, after years of activists highlight- ing the issue. “You lose confidence in the institu- tions,” Reyna said. “The people stop going to report it, because when you report it nothing happens.” A World Health Organization report this year revealed that one in three women in the Americas has experi- enced physical or sexual violence from a partner or by a third party at some point in their lives. In the first seven months of this year cases of femicide in Mexico dropped almost 40 per cent, compared to the same period in 2024, and intentional injuries against women decreased by 11 per cent, according to figures from the Federal Security Secretariat. Reyna indicated that the violence suffered by Mexican women is relat- ed to impunity, which she estimated at over 70 per cent, adding that this situa- tion leads women not to report crimes. — The Associated Press FABIOLA SÁNCHEZ AND FERNANDA FIGUEROA MARCO UGARTE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Claudia Sheinbaum said she felt a responsibility to press charges for all Mexican women. ;